we need some kind of "subscribers bill of rights" both to discourage and to check the stupid business models.
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It won't make any difference. There's a gamers Bill of Rights that nobody remembers. It was produced by the owner of a company that now ignores that it ever existed.
You'll own nothing and you'll be happy!
Can we get communism already?
I pirate everything, own everything and I'm happy as fuck. I even share my Jellyfin server with 20 other people so they can share in my joy.
I’m not sure what the logical outcome of this escalating arms race of enshittification will be, but as a career Sysadmin I’ve been able to avoid a LOT of this bullshit through self hosting, which is something a (Non-tech nerd) layman isn’t going to bother with, for as long as existing products (and their subscriptions) are still within “tolerable” levels.
But the thing is, a lot of the convenience with computing devices today didn’t exist in the 90’s, when it was more common for young normies to have what would be considered above average computer technical skills today.
When the entire market turns into inescapable subscriptions, the market for a non-technical friendly appliance box, like Synology came close to doing, shows up to corner the market on hardware you can own and run your own shit on with minimal headaches and no subscriptions.
In short, people with the money to spend can't be arsed to inconvenience themselves with self hosting or 'alternative' sources.
Folk without the money find a way through perceived necessity and maybe learn something on the way.
Then there's people with the money and the know-how who are just looking to save or do so on principle.
Younger generations grow up with subscriptions and black boxes that are not ultimately under their own control, and lack the knowledge to change it.
It's a sad state of affairs, but their tolerance for ads and subscription slop keeps attention away from people like me.
Makes me wanna throw out my hp printer I bearly use.
Edit: the printer was discovered broken lol